For more celebrity politics coverage.follow us on Flipboard.Candice Bergen in 1967. (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)

For Bergen, that interaction took place years ago, when she was an 18-year-old student at the University of Pennsylvania.

The “Murphy Brown” star, 71, recounted the date while appearing Wednesday night on “Watch What Happens Live,” Andy Cohen’s late night talk show on Bravo, Us Weekly said.

Bergen, who supported Hillary Clinton in the presidential election, appeared on the show wearing a “Free Melania” T-shirt. She also shared her story with Reese Witherspoon, her “Sweet Home Alabama” costar, who was also appearing on the show.

Cohen noted that the actress probably has the authority to speak on the matter of what it means to be a woman getting involved with the famously brash, narcissistic former New York real estate mogul and reality TV star.

In any case, the Emmy-winning actress described the date as a blind date, set up because Trump, now 70, was thinking of going to school at the University of Pennsylvania. He later graduated from the college.

Bergen said he called to ask if he could take her out for dinner, and he picked her up at her dorm.

But consider his outfit. According to Bergen, it was a three-piece burgundy suit, color-coordinated to match his loafers — and his limousine. Sure, it was the 1960s, the era of Nehru jackets and psychedelia, but still.

Bergen explained that their time together was brief, and she was home by 9.

“I was home very early,” said Bergen, who also modeled and starred in the hit films “The Group,” “The Sand Pebbles” and “Carnal Knowledge.”

“There was no physical contact whatsoever,” she said.

She added that Trump “was a good-looking guy — and a douche.”

Since Trump’s inauguration, Selma Hayak revealed that Trump tried to hit on her even though, she says, he knew she had a boyfriend.

More recently, Emma Thompson told Vanity Fair that she turned down Trump’s offer to go out on date back when she was filming “Primary Colors” in the 1990s, mostly because she only knew him for his “tasteless buildings.”

But she says that in some way she regrets turning him down because she jokingly wonders whether she “could have done something…You just don’t know, do you? I could have changed things. One way or the other.”